Anarchy Tour supporting the Sex Pistols, The Heartbreakers and The Damned.
- update 7 July 2008 - photos and punters view (DaveS)
- update 20 December 2014 - added DM front page & Ticket
- update 18 January 2017 - tidyed up page and added links
No Known audio or video
Welsh TV fimed outside and inside this venue. Recent unseen Pistols archive footage was screened on Welsh TV in 2002
From the great website God Save the Sex Pistols (run by Phil), Castle Caerphilly, Wales - online or archived PDF.
"December 14: Castle Cinema, Caerphilly (filmed). Outside the cinema some people from Caerphilly show their discontent at the Sex Pistols coming to play in their town. The band are interviewed before the gig by a local TV crew which also films the demo outside. This can be seen in " The Great Rock 'N' Roll Swindle" and the " Number One" film. A short part of the concert features in the " Punk And The Pistols" TV documentary and " The Filth & The Fury" movie."
1976/77 Julian Temple's early footage 18hrs
Known to contain several concerts including The Roxy 1 Jan 1977 and Harlesden plus Rehearsals footageJulian Temples 1976 footage 18 hours - included Roxy/Anarchy Tour/Harlesden/Rainbow - only the footage that was used in the film eventually got digitised because it was shot on an obscure format that does exist anymore and so it cost a fortune to put onto tape.
Sex Pistols: The Pride of Punk - By Peter Smith
THE CASTLE CINEMA, CAERPHILLY
In between the two Electric Circus gigs, the tour rolled into Wales. It was originally planned to call at Cardiff Top Rank ballroom, but when that gig was canceled, a local promoter offered up the possibility of playing at the Castle Cinema in Caerphilly. So, on December 14, the three punk bands rolled into Caerphilly, a small market town in the Welsh valleys. The south Wales people were not ready for punk rock and did their very best to prevent the gig from happening. An outraged resident wrote the following letter to the South Wales Echo (1976): “We feel bound to protest against the decision of our local Castle Cinema management to engage a ‘punk rock group’ already notorious for its dependence on obscenity, blasphemy and open violence.”
The gig went ahead and footage of the scene outside the venue can be seen in The Filth and the Fury film. It was quite a bizarre, almost surreal situation. A small choir was singing Christmas carols outside in the cold, while a preacher was reading a sermon and trying to convince those entering the venue not to do so. A leaflet was handed out reading: “Even though apparently just a passing fad . . . such trends are clearly part of the fulfilment of Jesus’ end” (Sex Pistols Official Website 2018).
The concert was not well attended, with around sixty people in the venue, and it all went off without any trouble. In the audience that night was Steve Strange, who would soon pioneer the new romantic movement and front the band Visage, who had a successful chart with single “Fade to Grey.”
Images of England Through Popular Music:
Class, Youth and Rock 'n' Roll ...
By K. Gildart
(more..) [extract] The most confrontational event during the Anarchy Tour occurred when the Sex Pistols crossed the English border into Wales. The show at a Caerphilly cinema promoted by Andy Walton witnessed a mobilisation that drew on a radical tradition of Welsh protest. The group was initially due to perform at the Top Rank Club in Cardiff on 14 December. The show was cancelled as a result of the decision taken by the Rank Organisation to ban the Sex Pistols from all its premises. An alternative was quickly found. The Castle Cinema in Caerphilly was a private establishment owned by Pauline Uttley. From the outset she took a libertarian view of the Sex Pistols phenomenon and said that she was unwilling to act as a censor: ‘I am not going to force people to see the show. If they want to, that is up to them’.”°
The struggle to prevent the show was reported in the national and local press. The Rhymney Valley District Council took a negative view of the Sex Pistols. They initially wanted to take ...
(page missing)
hundred. One observer, Kevin Dicks, later recalled ‘a large police presence of miners’ strike proportions’. The protest was given added colour by a ‘fire and brimstone’ speech by a religious leader that was boomed-out of a public address system. This was complemented by a choir singing hymns and Christmas carols as the Sex Pistols played on. Worshippers from the local Elm Church handed out leaflets linking punk to prophecy. Does the Sex Pistols’ ‘Anarchy in the UK’ tour offer the real answer to the needs of youth? What is the meaning of this latest controversial trend in the pop world? Oddly enough, this group’s own reported use of the word “antichrist” indicates the answer. This term describes the essence of the spirit of rebellion against all that God stands for. Even though apparently just a passing fad, therefore, such trends are clearly in part fulfilment of Jesus’ prophecy that before his return to earth, wickedness would multiply beyond all previous limits. John Birkin, the author of the leaflet, later claimed that his aim was ‘to make a clear stand against this further decline in moral standards’. Despite the protest the concert went ahead with the promoter claiming that ‘Caerphilly will be exactly the same tomorrow morning; nobody will be fallen dead in the street’. The Western Mail’s front page declared that ‘Hymns Score Biggest Hit at Punk Show’. Out of ten fans interviewed by the Rhymney Valley Express only one said that they enjoyed the concert. Nonetheless, the group had delivered three encores and ‘30 fans had danced in the aisles’. A week later Wayne Nowaczyk provided a review of the show for the same newspaper: ‘After irate councillors, pub and café closures, and fire and brimstone chastisement from the local clergy ... I did not see anyone who was obviously shocked at or depraved by the goings on’. Members of the local council did not share the pragmatism of Nowaczyk’s review. Councillor Davies told the Western Mail that ‘the fact so few people turned up for the concert is a victory for the people ... we hope we have given a lead to the rest of Wales to take positive action against filth in their town’. But political responses to the event were not unanimous. John ..." .. link
(page missing)
Caerphilly Anarchy Tour
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Caerphilly The Clash Anarchy Tour
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courtesy of Dave Smithson Flickr
4x above = Photo copyright David Smitham @ www.sex-pistols.net
Castle Cinema, Caerphilly, Wales
Clash opened the Caerphilly Anarchy gig - one of the few that actually happened! After a subdued, expectant buzz from the huddled few out of the side gloom, the four band members took to the stage: guitars strapped on / a yelled “ One Two Three Four!” / a venomous gob to the right from Simonon / Bright Lights! … and the band launch immediately into an abrasive thrash of noise with lyrics barked like angry dogs. I never caught a single lyric in their twenty minute set, but what a rush … all the early songs delivered at Ramones intensity / so much faster than recorded on their first album. Dave Smitham
Any further info, articles, reviews, comments or photos welcome. Please email blackmarketclash
If you know of any recording, please email blackmarketclash
There are several sights that provide setlists but most mirror www.blackmarketclash.co.uk. They are worth checking.
from Setlist FM (cannot be relied on)
from Songkick (cannot be relied on)
... both have lists of people who say they went
& from the newer Concert Database
Also useful: Ultimate Music datbase, All Music, Clash books at DISCOGS
A collection of articles, interviews, reviews, posters, tour dates from the ill feted Anarchy Tour. Articles cover December and the Tour.
If you know of any articles or references for this particular gig, anything that is missing, please do let us know.
BLOG RHYS MWYN - People’s Collection Wales, Sex Pistols @ Caerfli Dec 1976 (+ interview)
I have just written a piece for my Herald Gymraeg column (January 1st) on the fact the ‘People’s Collection’ website have just published a piece on Councillor Ray Davies, the man who tried to ban the Sex Pistols from playing the Castle Cinema in Caerli during the Anarchy Tour December 1976.
There is no doubt that for many Welsh people watching ‘The Great Rock’n Roll Swindle’ that the Caerli footage is amongst the most interesting thing in that film.
The fact there were more people outside the gig protesting and singing carols than there were inside watching the Pistols. Only in Wales. But fascinating in terms of Social History .. PDF
Pistols, Clash etc.:
What Did You Do On The Punk Tour, Daddy?
Peter Silverton, Sounds,
18 December 1976
Punk rock: Anarchy in the UK tribute tour in Caerphilly
22 October 2011
A 35th anniversary recreation of a controversial punk concert leaves BBC Wales' Nick Horton feeling nostalgic, not too embarrassed, and with gratifying ringing in the ears.
One of the posters at the back of the Caerphilly Workingmen's Hall read: "Punk's not dead".
Well, maybe not. PDF version
Dave Smithson's Photos
online or archived PDF
South Wales Punk
Photos mainly taken between 1976 and 1978 of Punk Bands visiting various South Wales venues.
&
Wales Online
40 years on, never seen before pictures PDF
&
Flickr
Caerphilly Anarchy Tour
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Caerphilly The Clash Anarchy Tour
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Blll Grundy Interview
BBC TV Look North look back
Youtube
BBC Look North 30th Anniversary of Punk/Anarchy Tour at Cleethorpes Winter Gardens. Contains interview with Captain Sensible. TX 14th Dec. 2006
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